On my ever-growing list of more advanced metalsmithing techniques to try, casting–specifically broom and cuttlefish casting–is near the top. The surprise and randomness of the results appeal to me just as much as their natural beauty, and I appreciate the fact that the resulting textures, patterns, and shapes really can’t be achieved through any other metalsmithing techniques. So if you’re up for a little adventurous metalworking and aren’t afraid of surprises (or fire . . . ), join me in learning broom casting!

1. Saw off the broom handle, leaving a stub about 2″ long. Cut all stitching from the broom bristles and bind them with wire (about 5″ to 6″ down from the top of the bristles) into a 3″ to 4″ thick round shape.2. Fill the bucket about two-thirds full with water and soak the broom bristles for at least 30 to 40 minutes or overnight.3. Remove the broom from the bucket and fasten the C-clamps to the broom handle stub so the broom stands straight up. Refill the bucket with water to two-thirds full and stand the broom upright in the bucket.

4. Melt 1 to 2 oz. of metal in the crucible until it melts into a liquid, balls up, and rolls around freely in the crucible. Add a pinch of borax flux when the metal has melted and mix with carbon rod or clean solder pick.5. Keeping flame on melting dish, pour a slow steady stream of metal into the bristles while moving the crucible in a slow spiral motion over the bristles.6. Douse the smoking broom with water.

7. Unbind the bristles and retrieve as many castings as you can. Select what you wish to keep, rebind the broom, and cast again, remelting any undesirable pieces with additional metal. When you’re completely finished casting, go through the bristles carefully to retrieve small bits of overlooked metal.8. Before incorporating broom-cast pieces into metal jewelry, clean and pickle them thoroughly.

You can learn more about broom casting and see examples of broom-cast metal jewelry in the complete article, Casting Metal with a Broom by Helen Driggs. Helen interviews Beth Rosengard, a metalsmith and jewelry artist who has, as Helen accurately puts it, “transformed this delightfully low-tech approach to molten metal into a sophisticated level of artistic expression.”

The Swan by Beth Rosengard. Necklace of baroque freshwater pearls and diamonds.

Like Helen, I got excited by the possibilities of modifying the broom-casting technique (as I usually do) into other kinds of metal castings, such as shells, twigs and bark, or maybe even moss. “You can use anything that will burn,” Beth says. “And the material doesn’t necessarily have to be bundled. For instance, you could pour molten metal over rice! Some materials might burn too fast, though, even when wet–like ferns.” Okay, maybe moss won’t work . . . but I’m still going to try! The idea of experimenting and creating unique shapes appeals to Beth, too, who admits that she “poured molten metal into a bucket of ice and ice water” and “got some very cool, organic splat shapes.” I bet!

Broom-Casting Tips and Safety

Beth shares the value of doing broom-cast pours with a partner, who can help with adding the borax flux or dousing the broom after pouring.

You can broom cast with “any metal that you’re able to melt to a liquid state: in other words, any metal that you might use in lost-wax casting,” Beth says.

Start with silver as a beginner, and if you really want the look of broom-cast metal in gold, you can plate it or thin the silver and “then use lost-wax casting to reproduce them more efficiently in gold,” Beth says.

And what about broom-casting safety? “First and foremost: pay attention to what you’re doing and where you’re pointing the torch,” Beth says. “It’s all too easy to lose concentration and burn yourself or someone else.”

Beth recommends doing broom casting outside, preferably on concrete. “It’s possible to miss the broom or bucket occasionally,” she says, “so stand back and watch out for spraying bits of hot metal.”

Remember to douse the broom after each pour to keep it from burning up too quickly as well as to keep you from getting burned when you pick through it to find your cast-metal pieces.

As Brad says in his tutorial, broom casting is a metalsmithing technique best done outdoors, “because wet straw is very ‘aromatic’ when burned!”

Master five types of casting as well as wax carving–a technique that allows you to create and then cast jewelry-making components exactly as you want them–with our Casting for Jewelry Makers Collection. It includes two top-notch instructional videos on casting and wax carving, as well as crucibles to help you with melting metal for casting and a bonus issue of Lapidary Journal Jewelry Artist magazine that features a lost wax casting ring project tutorial–all at a very special price!